Frontiers in Psychiatry (Aug 2022)

Seeking bridge symptoms of anxiety, depression, and sleep disturbance among the elderly during the lockdown of the COVID-19 pandemic—A network approach

  • Liang Zhang,
  • Liang Zhang,
  • Yanqiang Tao,
  • Wenxin Hou,
  • Haiqun Niu,
  • Zijuan Ma,
  • Zeqing Zheng,
  • Shujian Wang,
  • Shuang Zhang,
  • Yichao Lv,
  • Qiubai Li,
  • Xiangping Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.919251
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundBesides physical changes, elderly adults are prone to have mental disorders such as anxiety, depression, and sleep disturbance, and the pandemic of COVID-19 worsened the situation. However, internal relationships and co-occurrence of psychopathologies were scarcely examined. Therefore, in the current study, through network analysis, we inspected relationships among symptoms of depression, anxiety, and sleep disturbance and identified key symptoms that espoused the disease.MethodsWe asked 1,302 elderly adults to fill in Patient Health Questionnaire-2 (depressive symptoms), the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-2 (anxiety symptoms), and the Youth Self-rating Insomnia Scale (sleep disturbance) and then constructed three networks for elderly adults, male elderly, and female elderly. Via network analysis, we accomplished four goals. First, we identified symptom with the highest centrality (i.e., strength) index for each network; then, we found the strongest correlation (i.e., edges) in each network; thirdly, we confirmed specific nodes that could bridge anxiety, depression, and sleep disturbance; the last was to compare networks based on genders. Network stability and accuracy tests were performed.ResultsNetworks of elderly adults, male elderly, and female elderly were stable, accurate, and intelligible. Among all networks, “Nervousness”- “Excessive worry” (GAD-1- GAD-2) had the strongest correlation, and “Nervousness” (GAD-1) had the highest strength and bridge strength value. When we made a comparison between female elderly's and male elderly's networks, except for the significant difference in the mean value of “Difficulty initiating sleep” (YSIS-3), the findings showed that the two networks were similar. Network stability and accuracy proved to be reliable.ConclusionsIn networks of anxiety, depression, and sleep disturbance, anxiety played a conspicuous role in comorbidity, which could be a target for practical intervention and prevention.

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